The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 1, 1922, Page 3

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oe SATURDAY, APRIL 1, 1922 THE SEATTLE STAR PAGE 3 rr) a conontat—w itiam Fox's “why Girts Leave Home.” 5—Romuald Joube, Winter Garden, “Foolish Wives Coming Soon | to Columl The first real prvempendtess drama has made its app is “Foolish Wives,” an exts picturization of life and adi at Monte Carlo, made by Eric Stroheim for the Universal company. In the lavishness sets, the absolute accuracy of its tails and its unusual cl | tions it is reputed to amen hitherto attempted for 1—Scene from “Boomerang Bill,” Coliseum, 2—Harry Carey, Columbia. 8—Anna a. OUISE LOVELY, dainty ana tis Serieeticing TAYLOR'S LAST FILM we rowds Follow Louise Lovely, a United States by way of Blaine and| Movie Star, on Shopping Tour then Seattle was greeted by the Lib- erty News cameraman, who is al-| “Hey, Mr. Policeman, what's the! More stores, more shopping and wayn “on the job.” The pictures will big crowd down in front of Shuarts?|then a trip to the Rosaia flower be shown at the Liberty, beginning | S« ly killed or what?" | store, Third and Madison. Mr. P. F. Saturday morning, This news edi-| “Dunno, but I'll soon find out,” re-| Rosaia, manager of the store, pre tion also contains several other head: | plied the king traffic officer | sented the pretty little actreas with a line items, among which are the mys-| stationed at Second and Union, lovely corsage and a beautiful bow tery explosion at Carleton Park, the| And he did. quet of pink roses and while pictures visit of Mise Pankhurst, daughter of After forcing his way thru the| were being taken, Mr. Rosalia and the famous wuffraget, in Seattle, and | jam, Mr. Officer discovered that their! Miss Lovely indulged in a merry lit the opening of the fishing season on | wasn't anyone being killed, nor any-| tle conversation in French, a lan Lake Sammamish one to be arrested-—it was merely a guage which the actress speaks motion picttre actress doing her shop- | fluently “BULL” MONTANA ping. It's a fact. More stores, more shopping. Mins Louise Lovely, star of “Life's| Luncheon at Indian Summer as —~ — thing NOW COMEDY STAR | peat Quention,” the feature guests of C. A. € It is to be The screen's most handsome and Did You Know That Edith Roberts and Madge Bel lamy are often mistaken for cach other? John Griffith Wray, the direc tor of big Ince productions, was a schoolmaster? Theodore Roberta was once a sailor? Harry Myers was the origina- tor of art titles in films? That only two years ago Mar. guerite de la Motte was an ex- tra, hardly known in the film atudios? That Lester Cuneo ts the tallest star in pictures—eix feet two? Offers the most interesting as well & Chief interest in “The Green novel act, during which she calls ffemptation,” just released, les in Yohunteers among the young ladi@gne fact that it represents William | fm the audience. Jt is quite the b@fH. ‘Taylor's last contribution to the Boos scer appearance” Seattle: Mart of the cinema. “The Green Temptation” approx Amates technical perfection. Taylor Cc ra) L U M B I AP at tim time of nis death had become & master of lighting and of pictorial | composition. He belonged to the Ceelt De Mille schoo! of direction. Great care is shown im the ar- rangement of the smallest details tn furnishings. Figures are side-light: | ed. Lights are pinced in out-of-the- | way places to accentuate details of | Gott Of fellow, and it ie not at all PG. coration that would otherwise be| that he should come to | s€reen of the Columbia in a "gence | drama of that name. It is | ‘There are arguments for and| Jackson Gregory's novel and {Seaimst this technique. Detailed sents a vivid picture of a man lighting gives greater pictorial qual drifted around the world. ity to photoplays. It also: diverts | Harry Carey ts a “Man to ‘owl and J. H. Law- screen. presented opening today at the Strand, ix in the managers. Cameraman |ADVERTISING MEN Columbia theater on April 16, | 5 able young juvenile, “Bull” Montana, °¥®- She appears in a delightfully | again busy, And sensing that movie | | Much has been heard of how! s rtaining vaudeville act along | actresses like candy, Mr. Crow! pre. | HOLD HIGH JINKS Stroheim caused the constructi 4a specially packed box of the| The outstanding social event of|the Universal studios in G has aequired a star's dreasing room In the Holly wood tion, where Hunt rf basethrvag w “bygone hab oo tle shopping to do, the actress came choicest Indian Summer choco. |the season in Los Angeles took bape huge structures exactly di edien featuring the Hull, Bull's to town Friday and the management lates. last week when the “Wampas.” bet-|ing the principal buildings at of the nd and The od The trip ended with a visit to|ter known as the Western Motion | juropean pleasure resort. . a uniau hopping tour for Miss Shuart’s shoe store. Mr. C. A. Picture Advertisers, held their high | who have seen the picture say! drapes are of mauve eolor, and the Lovely Shuart ected Mins Lovely at the |Jinks at the Ambassador - The | the director has absolutely furniture made of delicate wicker up hburn of the Fred -8./ door and then turned hin distinguish. | Wampas t* the publicity men’s or-| ayceq Monte Carlo, from the atetared ta tavender, 00 entinty’the | Hie aced a nifty iit ed customer over to W. B. Shuart, |Fenization. and nothing that has 0c | architecture of the Casino down i Bulle craving for the artistic. And | folet who fitted her to a dainty pair of the social life of movieland | th» monograms on the linen of 1 Tes ene * corner ' Ot the antorecm {Pe nilver »—"just the kind I've |¢ the last many moons €qualed | yrote| de Paris nies Pp ccge ne G ; been trying in vain urchase for |this trols Universal announced that Tf apprectatior over weeks,” «he exclaimed : than $400,000 alone was spent a trip and smilingly thanked the young . sets and that varying numbers - at 12th and E. Madison, where clerk for his efforts to please her. For the elaborate production of! extra actors, from eeveral posed for several pictures and! And for the benefit of those who | “Oliver Twist,” in which Jackle/ to several thousands, were quaintance of the various did not see Miss Lovely—she is Coogan will play the name role./time to time to get crowd with the pleture. Having quite a lit —— Jattention from the action of the/ WINTER GARD jstory. This latter result lessens the | dramatic value. | | we Betty Compson scores heavily as pees MLS OF ZORDA the star of this offering and proves ts cgee sro Resonale gee | herself a star of Many welldevol M joped Aalents. She portrays a versa: Jean TOM tile role of a woman whose life Neat wc | eadereove two big, vital transitions “The Isle of Zorda,” which oped! She has three names in the picture at the Winter Garden today, Jajand in reality portrays three differ Jules Verne story—a picturiaat! ent characterizatior new dreasing room is a composite ¢ dive and baby-pink tints. Th t the nereen # on as ROBINSON CRUSOR Robinson Crusoe, dreased in s rode up to the gate of Univ City in a limousine the ether day. | made the Bis novel, “Mathias Sandorf.” First, she is the typleal French | Bem. anew ‘tovely," indeed. A charming fittle|1on Chaney has been selected tol typical of the surging p eee ae ese. ee a eae oe. ot ptt ew at Promptly at 12 o'clock Mies Lovely [blue-eyed blond. You, girls, she hag |Play Fagin. It will be Jackie Coo-| ers who throng the plazas, the ja scbea ‘ta: Pacer thee tbe toes | the dust. It was Harry Myers, | &frived at the Sweet Sixteen Shop. | bobbed hair, likes short skirts, but | ¢an's biggest effort. the promenades and cafes of | dancer, the idol of the French gre star of the Universal serial, who |J. 8%. Satmon, manager of the «tore, | not too hort, and thinks that knick: | HAT’S I A NAME? Carlo. . Betty Compson does better \aid tho dire work had prepared for ber arrival by per-sers are just the thing for traveling | = 4 ‘The smngniicent. oaaia al and during and after the war, “si selecting a number gar. or hiking, and she'd be even willing| The new Thomas H. Ince photo-| crowds and the colorful acti thé broad-visioned woman, whose |work in “The Green Tempta-| nso ng \aleda’’ gar” ta etae? complete regeneration has been tion” than in any film since| The 10th anniversary of the ~ th | wan well rewarded, fc “BOOMERANG BILL” | cet ieeet |. the Miracle Man,” att ey He | to include them In her street ward. |play is titled “The Man She Mar-| Monte Carlo have been used, it 1 than | robe if the rest of the feminine sex ried,” and Anita Stewart has just| understood, only as a setting #6 | made one called “The Woman He/| Von Stroheim’s strange and Universal Film company ix to be celebrated in May. Univer a jiffy Miss Lovwly purchased a . is the oldest pt ol in con charming little Biege color potret arried story of the adventures i ltwilt wrap. Mra. C. Smith, the clerk ale Barrivcale is on the stage $$ trigues of a bogus Russian ee eee of time to ‘he [who made the sale, was all smiles, |to remain indefinitely, it is prot-| | Mademoiselle Andree Peyre, |and his urralt of the tlvollas rors of the conflict. Theodore Kosloff, noted Russian! a star overnight. +-Margerite Bran | dancer and screen actor, plays the} In tho heavy role—the Apache— . t of “The Green Temp par d, ap named Ed-| credit Here, again, the man got able. She has made a pronounc | French “stunt” aviator, has ar- of an American diplomatic De le ue «can wh b target hsation is seomang ae as hair like the; ‘redit. uaa, “Ble alee phe the | hit in big town vaudeville with her| rived in Hollywood to do thrill coke a, | amet gpe ggio dtonagay sap Mie “ psa before-and-after | 7 ee creat crowd wh new te alled “Pic Stances have made a “crook,fiut| Burns, Neely Edwards, Mary Thur ae mee os ms eam fter MARRIED great 4 » 4 in w playlet called Picking | ing things in a new serial which Paul Dickey will play a rf in Doug Fairbanks’ new film. front of the store Ruth Roland is making. Harry (“Snub”) Pollard was mar ‘Whose own fine instincts, intellfmee| man and Hetty Brice, make up a” those th beam upon you tied the other day to Mra. and sympathy keep him « “maf is| unusually clever cast dentifrice ads. When he made h told in “Boomerang Bill,” the plure A NEW STAR? screen appearance at the Rivoli play starring Lionel Barrymog at} Ability’ to attract people to the|New York scores of flappers member of a promix Coliseum. : box office is the chief requisite for scanned their programs to learn his|!#*!neton, Kentucky, She is not, beth Bowen, who is sald to be a nt family jn 4 Personal a movie stardom. Cecil de Mille once | name ae an actren Appearances & ere | |said that personality and dramatic! When f ors begin to scan pro ——— Every @ wa ability were the prime requisites. | grams to learn the name a hand Dimitri Buchowetrki, director of Day “TRAVELIN’ 0: | Personality means box office attrac-|some youth he is well on the wa All for a Wor: is making an |tion. That's what made Valentino |to stardom. other German film with Emil Jan (Paramount) : wi - - —e — __. | mings in the leading role | | PATHE REVIEW HAS Government |, SCREEN CARICATURE ° ms rd a new William & Hart's latest phture, DW _X va PIAA X¥ \A ¥ WA XX “Travelin’ On,” now at the Lierty . peaker b listor (Conducted in co-operation with <q Hart wrote the story himseit ne out of focus, | Associated First National Pictures, > ae |) ovies aipereetlinen eC nepitenktatives. of the motion pt of ki rd , Teasio—Anna Q. Nilsson is the wife 1 “THE VILLAGE dustry, the department of his nose er |of Guy Coombs. She is of Swedish 1 P 4 oe }commerce and the National his r is, elon: |escent She is as handsome off 3 q ramoun }tion of Manufacturers will r he ment " sereen as of hag wonderful Chates Ra fi red Wont tover | Washington April 11 to develop p head,” hia head literally. b len She has no hobbies that |} [ON Rush | for t of movies to welled wo ar utilizatic | fullest assistance to American ir As a farmer boy, with a burning | ‘TY Gesire to make a namé for himself ax| That is fodder upon which W @ detective, Caries Fay gives a spir- Hays, generalisstmo of the mo ited and pleasing performance in “A |™ay ruminate if, indeed, he Is not Village Sleuth,” the offering at the | now behind th Oak. is the first participation in a movie Donald MuDouald This new form 19 really photo. e—Ruth sir, one of the graphic caricature in mot It te and most talented of lead uys an important role rquernder.” She is to part of Eive, the wife of ote. You, she is the wife of Irv. <¢ Cummings in private lite by” was filmed for the Film corporation a jong Clara Kimball Young ad | yakland.—Richard Rar. | thelmess is He is married to Mary Hay, who at the pre t time is making a decided hit in “Marjor laine,” the musi version the popular play, “Pomander WAlk.”! Constance Binney is 22 and not mar ried Intere new movement It is @ Paramount gicture and was | Project since he accepted his present produced by Thomas fH oe * COLONIAL | “ Girls Have you got “screen” personality? Do you want to know if y photograph well?’ / Every evening Miss makes a real picturg. Photoplay—on the stage | the Strand, using an of young women from audience, Come—and on this, We will sh 4 pictures on our screen week. plans for of mo tures in boost American abroad. Julius in, new director of the bureau of ign and domestic commerce, has arranged for the services of M. F opold, expert industrial photog 6: of the bureau of mine: “WHY GIRLS LEAVE HOME” (rex ‘The Girt + Anna Q. Nilsson William Fox's spleidid attraction, “Why Girls Leave time” opened at the Colonial today for a four day will send @ government en run. This is one of the best Fox gineer to any plant to arrange for tures since “Conneeticut Yankeo" | filming of scenes showing production nd “Over the Hill.” It pictures the | His foreign representatives will ar. | experience of two pretty young girls, |range for distribution and exhibition! @eh brought up in a different envir- | abroad. onment. The cost of such pictures to manu —- . - | tacturers would be about $1 a foot temas and rties have | If the idea of exploiting American Paramount to be used in “Blood |%* the April conference, Will Hays Gai Send,” the Thanez novel |™AY start work on his first scenario eh be being timed with Ru | it it suRweated that the movie in-| dolph Valentine dustry take the lead in the move | ne me pts. |ment. A movie telling the story of | ype tick gre a ei bp ig sork de ANNOUNCE NEW prove of immense interest to Buro FALL PHOTOPLAYS hown ‘i rope are nt Acerions| Ferguson will soon return to | ™ the sereen, Her next 4—Dagmar Godowsky first appeared on the screen in “If 1 W. King.” Afterward she frequently, ap. nk Mayo. He is man until death do RANA V\ Sele lente AXXV\A Koa Fa, | peared opposite ¥ to be her Jeadin them part—I wonder 1 Sunshine Sammy” plays In s with Snub Pollard. He also 1a prominent part in “Penrod,” ring W Barry. Sammy says mace ut role is one of his favorites. | Student—It would be far safer and ethical for you to in the from the author to adapt his story for a motion pleture, You are almost certain to get into some kind of a technical mixup if you do not first obtain the rights from the author | Vera—"The Old Homestead” was ybe your little b a “Jackie Coogan’ and your little girl “Baby Peggy” Here's your chance to find out, Every afternoon Miss B%) 18 “The Outcast.” vy xt ple ba Twenty-five school children re- isles ys ct eet by Fam-| Lavy alee & entino completes “Blood and sand cently sent a signed petition to €./"Rovin. Heod" “ia. Dicastad fairy pic on th MOMMY G0 “Amon Judd.” by Jenn the Goldwyn company asking sitnaniy new ‘oui. ie teat of the Strand—using Fae evin Willat wii air ho Saverey very Mt Ceeee ; finished yet and I am unablé to tell oy nail y Dilton in “The filmed. j you the cast «yours. Mb The giren Cal - Tee Said kiecmd streke, thin’ vill be shown on our sereen s City of Silent Men,” in which Tom 2 An over-enthusiastic preas agent 4 Me han recently starred, Constance Talmadge is in New York city just of great bOusht to preserve 1,100 costumes. | now, She admits that she is fond of rnst La. | That many mothballs would fill the « but is most awfully glad C eri fitrn | ball park \to be in old New York Bhree months in the says 200 poundy of mothbalis were | Motion Pietures of Strand andi ences will also be taken, Miss Lovely also presents her famous Orpheum act, “Their Wedding Night?” with Wilton Welch, the Ethel Clayton comes to the Liberty soon in “The Cradle,” | aynetr wish to learn tho lat steps and be up to date, based on Eugene | telephone jott 3187. Prof. Jack successful stage play, |%% of The Hippodrome, Figth and Brieux' Unlversity, will teach you. Begin jtwite rein a child's love Tecon-| ners classes start each Monday her catranged parents bi gel Adyar: 2 | Hold the prem! “The Mayor's | Wife” haw been changed to “Should Husbands Know? a Hugene O'Brien's contract is up Ho will Probably return to the speak ts entertaining nee Talmadge wt. On the way art = attended

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